Showing posts with label Voters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Voters. Show all posts

Monday, February 9, 2015

FOX NEWS POLL: Voters disagree with vision Obama expressed in State of the Union - Fox News Poll: Nearly half of voters say Obama downplaying Islamic terror threat - READ THE POLL RESULTS

SOTU.jpg January 20, 2015: U.S. President Barack Obama delivers his State of the Union address to a joint session of the U.S. Congress on Capitol Hill in Washington. (REUTERS/Larry Downing)

Many American voters are not on the same page as President Obama when it comes to the mood of the country and his economic proposals. Yet significant improvements in perceptions of the economy are boosting approval of the president — and less than half of voters want his executive actions repealed.

First, Americans don’t think we’re the happy family President Obama described in his State of the Union speech.  A new Fox News national poll released Wednesday finds that by a three-to-one margin, voters see America as a dysfunctional family rather than as the “tight-knit” grouping Obama claimed we are (73-24 percent).

Click here for full results of the poll (pdf)

Men, women and voters of all age groups endorse the dysfunctional description, and even a majority of Democrats — 61 percent — agrees. Still, Democrats are more than twice as likely as Republicans to call America a tight-knit family (37 vs. 14 percent).

Voters also sharply disagree with the president’s strategy of taking government actions to help improve economic conditions specifically for the middle class. By a 26-point margin, they think government policies should help improve the economy for everyone (61 percent) rather than target actions just for the middle class (35 percent). Even voters describing themselves as middle class think the focus should be on improving the economy overall (59 percent) rather than just for the middle class (37 percent). 

When it comes to helping everyone versus the idea of “spreading the wealth,” voters are more evenly divided. Forty-six percent think it is a good idea and 45 percent a bad idea to use some of the money government collects in taxes to “spread the wealth” to others who are less well off. That’s unchanged since 2008 when it was also 46 percent good idea vs. 45 percent bad.

Perhaps predictably, that view breaks down along income-related lines. Voters in households earning less than $50,000 like the idea of spreading the wealth (by a 12-point margin), while those earning $50,000 or more don’t like it (by a 9-point margin). Those voters describing themselves as middle class are more evenly divided: 45 percent call it a good idea and 47 percent say bad idea.

Roughly two-thirds of Democrats think spreading the wealth is a good idea (69 percent), while two-thirds of Republicans say the opposite (68 percent).

There’s more agreement that things are improving, as 53 percent of voters think the economy is getting better. That’s up 10 percentage points from 43 percent in September — and marks a new high during Obama’s presidency. The previous high was 49 percent recorded in both October 2012 and May 2010. Still, for 36 percent of voters it feels like economic conditions are getting worse. 

Those living in higher-income households (58 percent) are more likely than those in lower-earning households (48 percent) to say the economy is getting better. In addition, voters under age 45 (59 percent) are more likely than those ages 45 and over (48 percent) to feel things are improving.

Democrats (72 percent) are more than twice as likely as Republicans (35 percent) to say things are looking up on the economy. 

Despite a record-high number saying the economy is improving, only 19 percent say they are better off financially now than when Obama took office. Some 28 percent feel they are worse off, while a slim 52-percent majority says their family’s financial situation is about the same.

Sunnier perceptions of the economy have helped Obama’s job rating: 45 percent of voters approve of how he is doing, while 51 percent disapprove. While his rating is still in negative territory, this is the first time since October 2013 that approval of the president’s performance has been this high. Last month, 42 percent approved and 53 percent disapproved. 

The increase in approval of Obama comes mainly from independents: 45 percent approve now, compared to just three in 10 in early January (31 percent) and December (30 percent).

And Congress also gets its best ratings in more than a year, although that’s not saying a lot: 18 percent approve, while 73 percent disapprove. The last time approval of Congress was this high was July 2013. In December, 14 percent approved of Congress and 80 percent disapproved.

Now that Republicans control Congress, some wonder if GOP lawmakers will try to cancel or repeal the unilateral actions Obama has taken through executive orders. Voters have mixed views: 45 percent want Congress to repeal Obama’s unilateral actions, yet 39 percent disagree. 

Political identification plays a big role in that assessment: most Republicans want Obama’s executive orders repealed (by 71-17 percent), while Democrats oppose that idea (60-23 percent). Independents split: 40 percent for repeal and 40 percent against.

Pollpourri

Voters resoundingly reject Obama’s proposal to start taxing so-called 529 college savings accounts: fully 82 percent call that a bad idea, including 80 percent of Democrats. The disapproval climbs to an overwhelming 88 percent among parents. The White House announced late Tuesday it will withdraw plans to tax these accounts. 

More than four in 10 American voters describe themselves as middle class (43 percent), and another 13 percent say they are “upper” middle class. Even 38 percent of those with household annual income over $100,000 consider themselves middle class.

Just 15 percent of voters think the country is safer than when Barack Obama became president. More than twice as many — 34 percent — feel the country is less safe now. The largest number — 50 percent — say things are the same.

The Fox News poll is based on landline and cell phone interviews with 1,009 randomly chosen registered voters nationwide and was conducted under the joint direction of Anderson Robbins Research (D) and Shaw & Company Research (R) from January 25-27, 2015. The full poll has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus three percentage points.


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FOX NEWS POLL: Voters disagree with vision Obama expressed in State of the Union - Fox News Poll: Nearly half of voters say Obama downplaying Islamic terror threat - READ THE POLL RESULTS

Monday, January 19, 2015

FOX NEWS POLL: Voters want Obama to sign bill approving Keystone - FOX NEWS POLL: Voters expect GOP Congress to win more often than Obama - FOX NEWS POLL: Obama gets low marks for fighting Islamic extremists

keystonepipelineinternal.jpg

Most Americans of all political stripes support construction of the long-delayed Keystone XL oil pipeline, and want President Obama to sign legislation approving it, according to a new Fox News poll. 

The pipeline would transport oil from Canada to refineries in the United States. 

A 65-percent majority says Obama should sign the Keystone legislation, according to the poll.  That includes 82 percent of Republicans, 60 percent of independents and 52 percent of Democrats. 

Click here to view full results of the poll (pdf)

Overall, only 22 percent of voters think the president should veto it — which he has threatened to do.

The U.S. House passed a bill approving the pipeline Friday.  The Senate is now considering Keystone legislation, but there won’t be a final vote this week.

Support for Keystone has held steady for years:  68 percent of voters backed it at the end of 2014, 70 percent in 2013 and 67 percent in 2012.

Here again, support comes from more than half of Democrats, most independents and almost all Republicans. 

The Fox News poll is based on landline and cell phone interviews with 1,018 randomly chosen registered voters nationwide and was conducted under the joint direction of Anderson Robbins Research (D) and Shaw & Company Research (R) from January 11-13, 2015. The full poll has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus three percentage points.


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FOX NEWS POLL: Voters want Obama to sign bill approving Keystone - FOX NEWS POLL: Voters expect GOP Congress to win more often than Obama - FOX NEWS POLL: Obama gets low marks for fighting Islamic extremists

Friday, September 12, 2014

Montserrat voters go to the polls to elect new government

meade_romeo_180324487 Premier Reuben Meade and Opposition leader Donaldson Romero (File Photo)

BRADES, Montserrat, Thursday September 11, 2014, CMC – Voters in this tiny British Overseas Territory are casting their votes on Thursday to elect a new government.

Political observers say the contest is between the incumbent Movement for Change and Prosperity (MCAP) headed by Premier Reuben T Meade and the recently formed People’s Democratic Movement (PDM) led by businessman Donaldson Romeo. Both parties are contesting all nine seats at stake in the Legislative Council.

The Electoral Office said 31 candidates had been nominated to contest the polls, including a record number of 13 independents.

Three of the independents including former premier Dr. Lovell Lewis have come together under the banner of the Association of Independent Candidates (AIC).

The 12 polling stations in the six electoral districts in the volcano ravaged island opened at 7.00 am (local time) and will close at 6.00 P.M. There are 3, 886 eligible voters.

In the 2009 general election, the MCAP won six of the nine seats with independent candidates including Lewis, winning the other three seats. In the 2009 poll, 2347 people voted.

Meade has campaigned on the theme that his administration needs another term to continue the work it started in 2009.

“Looking at where the country was in 2009…we think we deserve the opportunity to complete the work we started”.

But the PDM says it is quietly confident of winning the election that is observed by a four-member team from the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (CPA).

“We are not going to count our chickens before they are hatched, but the hens are crackling. So it is PDM all the way,” Romeo said.

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Montserrat voters go to the polls to elect new government

Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Quarrel breaks out over voters list for PNM election

Trinidad & Tobago’s Express newspaper reported on Friday that an imminent legal battle could result in the People’s National Movement (PNM) having to postpone its internal elections, set for May 18.

According to the newspaper, the team representing aspiring PNM leader Pennelope Beckles Robinson argued on Thursday that the election process was being manipulated to the benefit of incumbent leader Dr Keith Rowley and was far from being free and fair.

Member of Parliament for Laventille West Nileung Hypolite, the logis­tics co-ordinator for the Beck­les Robinson team, reportedly told the Express Beck­les Robinson’s team would not stand by and watch the democratic process thwarted, “in the interest of a few, self-serving persons.”

In an interview at a private residence in Valsayn yesterday, Hypolite produced several documents, purporting to show how the process was being influenced unfairly.

He reportedly claimed that approximately 7,000 applicants for the right to vote in the internal election, signed on during a registration drive were rejected because they were perceived to be supporters of Beckles Robinson, their names were rejected.

“The PNM cannot be seen as an all-inclusive party when they are rejecting 7,000 persons,” said Hypolite.

Hypolite said he and the team will be encouraging the 7,000-plus members to write to the elections committee, querying their rejection.

He said an official letter from the Beckles Robinson team will be dispatched, on behalf of the applicants they had received money from and submitted forms.

Referring to an injunction filed on Thursday, which stopped the elections for the Medical Practitioners Association of Trinidad and Tobago (MPATT), Hypolite said “that may very well be the way we will be heading”.


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Quarrel breaks out over voters list for PNM election